A new survey from audio-visual technology company Jabra has uncovered that approximately half of remote participants report being forgotten, talked over, or excluded during hybrid meetings. The findings highlight persistent deficiencies in meeting technology and etiquette that undermine the effectiveness of hybrid work arrangements, according to the study reported by TechRadar.
The Extent of 'Forgotten' Remote Workers
The negative experience is especially pronounced for certain demographics. The survey indicates that 16% of women and 26% of junior workers are more likely to feel excluded compared to their peers. These disparities suggest that hybrid meetings may be exacerbating existing inequalities in workplace visibility and voice.
Jabra attributes much of the problem to dated technology rather than the hybrid concept itself. The company argues that poor tech amplifies cultural issues rather than creating them, as it fails to give all participants equal visibility.
Hybrid Meetings vs. Fully Remote: A Comparison
Hybrid meetings perform worse than fully remote meetings across multiple metrics, the study found. The following table compares the percentage of workers reporting each issue:
| Issue | Hybrid Meetings | Fully Remote Meetings |
|---|---|---|
| Missed content | 59% | 41% |
| Feel excluded | 55% | 38% |
| Need follow-up meetings to clarify details | 42% | 28% |
These figures underscore that hybrid meetings are the least effective meeting format.
The Tech Toll: Failures and Delays
Despite years of remote and hybrid work, companies continue to struggle with meeting room technology. The survey reveals that three in four hybrid meetings experience at least one technical failure. Participants frequently report difficulties hearing (73%) or seeing (68%) other attendees.
These failures add an average of 11 minutes to every hybrid meeting, with potentially larger losses for the biggest companies, according to Jabra. Common practices that compound the problem include: 37% of participants using a single laptop as a microphone and speaker, 31% reverting to audio-only after video fails, and 23% dialing in by phone for audio. Additionally, 34% noted that participants join on their own individual devices rather than using a central meeting room system.
Meeting Time Wasted and Employee Fatigue
Workers spend an average of eight hours per week in meetings, with more than that in Denmark, India, and the UK. The survey indicates that more than half (58%) of this meeting time is generally considered unnecessary. Furthermore, 66% of participants leave meetings without clear action items, and 59% demand follow-ups to clarify missed points.
Zoom fatigue is also widespread: 42% of workers hit their energy limit within two hours of back-to-back meetings, and 83% within four hours. Jabra stresses the need to reframe meetings entirely, holding calls only when necessary to ensure participants are alert and actively collaborating.
Fixing the Problem: Infrastructure and Purpose
Jabra recommends that companies invest in meeting room technologies—such as microphones, cameras, and connectivity—to bring remote participants closer to in-person attendees. The report urges a clear meeting purpose to improve engagement.
While some companies have turned to AI for meeting summaries and live transcriptions, widespread use remains low due to poor trust and privacy/compliance issues. Holger Reisinger, SVP of Jabra's Enterprise Video Business Unit, cautioned: "AI can enhance a well-run meeting, but it can't fix a broken one."
The findings serve as a reminder that effective hybrid work requires deliberate investment in both technology and meeting culture to prevent the exclusion of remote colleagues.